82 St"L1.d.y a:t horn.e -ov-ith the UN'ZV-ERSZT""Y of C :I:C.A..GO Chacun à son gôut . . . "Everyone to his own taste, It as the French say . . . and we believe it, too That's why you'll find an intellectual oppor- tunity to suit your taste in Chicago's unique Home-Study program . . . whatever your aim: learn pre-history or modern art, write a fine poem or invest your money wisely, study Freud's psy- chology or Toynbee's philosophy. 150 courses for adults . . . use your leisure creatively as you study Archeology, Creative Writing, Astronomy, linguistics, Great Books, Semantics, Personal Investments, library Science, Religion, Mathematics, World Affairs, and other fields. Open to all . . . whether you're self-educated or hold the Ph.D., select any courses that interest you. INDIVIDUAL INSTRUCTION. . . begin at any time, and study at your convenience, AT HOM E . . . earn academic credit. For full information, write for the Home-Study ANNOUNCEMENTS; no obli- gation, of course. The Home-Study Department UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO Box Y-72, Chicago 37, III. Fred F. Schock, Mgr. s AND E S SPRING LAKE BEACH, N. J. I ts own private beach and country club with I8-hole golf plus new out- door swimming pool. Dancing nightly in the air conditioned Essex lounge Bathers' buffet luncheon. Monmouth Pk. nearby. Am. Plan. Write Mgr. or Tel. GI 9-7000. ALL THAT IS NEW ORLEANS! / /S'NCE . '--T / 7880 FRENCH AND CREOLE CUISINE Washington at Coliseum Sts., New Orleans, La. fM I / / I I'J ST. ARMAND'S KEY / SARASOTA / FLORIDA this summer is also on MARTHA'S VINEYARD in EDGARTOWN tween two layers over the knuckles of each han d. The two men warmed up with two no-contact rounds without gloves- feinting and motioning punches, which they checked in the air. All I could see was that Liston was a well-schooled conventional boxer, standing even straighter than Louis and using a long left that resembled a thick-bodied snake with a darting head. The man looked ponderous but the hands fast. There was hardly more to see when the men put on gloves and sparred three rounds, conventionally but carefully. Liston gave an impression of power, but he was not trying to hurt, and McCarter was content to keep the bIg man moving. Often, after a straIght left, Liston would drop his body and throw a left hook to the ribs. It was evident, though, that, unlike Johansson, he was a two- handed fighter. Liston followed the sparring with a long, earnest attack on the heavy bag- nothing fancy, but at times vindictive. The light bag was less in his line. H un- dreds of situps followed, then rope- skipping for two sides of a long-playing record. The second selection was "Night Train," and he pounded out the sound of the wheels running through the night, his feet coming up just high enough to let the rope pass under them, as if he were treading a hody into the floor. During the rope-jumping, he flared up in mock anger at King, the camp clown, who had been snapping pictures of him. "You fired! " he shouted. "You working for me or for the publicity de- partment? Let them pay you!" King pantomin1ed despair but seemed not much concerned. He gets fired often, hut is always rehired. Liston went on to do more hundreds of situps, with his legs strapped to a board slanting steeply up- ward, then let Reddish carom medicine balls off his iron torso, and wound up with a specialty-standing on his head and hands, swaying like a bifurcated pendulum, and taking all the weight on the top of his head and the muscles of his neck. Physically, it was a tremendous workout, and he was not breathing hard at the end of it. \Vhen it was over, he put on a heavy robe and motioned to me to approach and ask him questions. He reacted to them as if they were medicIne balls thrown at his middle; he let them bounce. I asked him when he first knew that he could knock out a man wIth a short punch-the great test of a hitter. "\^/hen I hit Williams," he said. 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